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06/28/2015 - The Secrets of Secretion

A team of Harvard scientists have created a new technology for fluid secretion that self assembles, as seen above, self heals and self reports. (Image courtesy of Jiaxi Cui and Joanna Aizenberg, John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences)

Anything you can do, nature can do better. Chemical delivery systems, self-healing cells, non-stick surfaces — nature perfected those long ago. Now, researchers at Harvard have hacked nature’s blueprints to create a new technology that could have broad-reaching impact on drug delivery systems and self-healing and anti-fouling materials.

The secret is secretion. Living tissues rely on their ability to package, transport and secrete liquid, where and when it’s needed. Nature’s secretion system is responsive, self-regulatory, and intrinsically linked with its surroundings but synthetic systems haven’t been able to replicate that complexity until now.

The new system, self-assembled through phase separation, consists of liquid droplets inside a supramolecular polymer gel with a thin layer of liquid on its surface. When the surface liquid is removed or depleted, the droplets spontaneously release only enough fluid to replace what is lost on the surface.

“Current fluid secretion technologies are generally designed with one-time only release mechanisms. Once the fluid is released, it continues flowing, at a consistent pace, until the supply is exhausted, regardless of the needs of its surroundings,” said Aizenberg. “These kinds of triggered releases aren’t responsive to the consumption of fluid. Our system ties fluid secretion to fluid consumption and controls for when and how much liquid is secreted at a time.”

The feature is a major advance for material application, especially the non-stick, slippery material known as SLIPS (Slippery Liquid-Infused Porous Surfaces) developed in the Aizenberg lab.

“This system opens the way to create dynamic designer polymers that are capable of self-relubrication and highly regulated and long-lasting anti-fouling behavior,” said Jiaxi Cui, a postdoc in Aizenberg’s lab and a lead author on the paper.

Instability is the key to this system’s success. Just as in nature, the secretion system developed by Aizenberg and her team is out of equilibrium, unstable enough to adapt and respond to its surroundings. The supramolecular polymers are reversibly bonded to each other, meaning they can come apart to allow the liquid to filter through the matrix, then stitch themselves back together and adjust to the shrinking liquid reserves.

This is a major step forward in the design of self-healing materials.

“There is a whole class of self-healing polymers out there, but most can’t stitch themselves together if there is a big gash down the middle,” said Daniel Daniel, a graduate student in Aizenberg’s lab and coauthor on the paper. “Polymers can’t fly through the air but they can swim through liquid.”

When this system is cut down the middle, the newly exposed polymer surface signals droplets to secrete liquid, quickly filling in the crack and bridging the ends of the broken polymers. Over time, the polymer strands will swim through the liquid and stitch themselves back together.

A demonstration of the spontaneous, cooperative self-healing process of a 200 micrometer thick gel film. After cut, the exposed polymer surface signals the embedded droplets to secrete liquid, quickly filling in the crack and bridging the ends of the broken polymers, allowing the polymer strands to stitch themselves back together. (Courtesy of Jiaxi Cui and Joanna Aizenberg, John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences)

Like the gauge on a gas tank, the system can self-report its liquid levels. As the fluid is secreted, the gel becomes more transparent.

The system could also be used to improve drug delivery systems. Certain drugs, such as those used to treat cancer, are harmful if released all at one. A system that could not only tell a chemical where and when to release, but how quickly to release, could have a major impact on certain treatments.

The Aizenberg lab is at the forefront of this kind of adaptable and responsive material science.

“For years, material scientists created static materials and then tried to figure out how to get them to change as an afterthought,” Aizenberg said. “Now, the direction of material science is to look at nature and recognize that nature has already invented sophisticated responsive, dynamical material systems, and we can take inspiration from that.”

Other contributors to the work include Alison Grinthal, a research scientist at SEAS, and Kaixiang Lin, of the Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology at Harvard.

This research was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy’s Basic Energy Sciences Office (DE-SC0005247) and the Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (DE-AR0000326).